Origins on the approximate site of the 1858 football match between
Melbourne Grammar and
Scotch College.
Tom Wills is depicted umpiring behind two young players contesting the ball. The plaque reads that Wills "did more than any other person – as a footballer and umpire, co-writer of the rules and promoter of the game – to develop Australian football during its first decade." Primitive forms of football were played sporadically in the Australian colonies in the first half of the 19th century. Compared to
cricket and
horse racing, football was considered a mere "amusement" by colonists at the time, and while little is known about these early one-off games, evidence does not support a causal link with Australian football. In
Melbourne, in 1858, in a move that would help to shape Australian football in its formative years, private schools (then termed "
public schools" in accordance with nomenclature in England) began organising football games inspired by
precedents at English public schools. The earliest match, held on 15 June, was between
Melbourne Grammar and St Kilda Grammar. On 10 July 1858, the Melbourne-based ''
Bell's Life in Victoria and Sporting Chronicle'' published a letter by
Tom Wills, captain of the
Victoria cricket team, calling for the formation of a "foot-ball club" with a "code of laws" to keep cricketers fit during winter. Born in Australia, Wills played a nascent form of
rugby football while a pupil at
Rugby School in England, and returned to his homeland a star athlete and cricketer. Two weeks later, Wills' friend, cricketer
Jerry Bryant, posted an advertisement for a
scratch match at the
Richmond Paddock adjoining the
Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG). This was the first of several "kickabouts" held that year involving members of the
Melbourne Cricket Club, including Wills, Bryant,
W. J. Hammersley and
J. B. Thompson. Trees were used as goalposts and play typically lasted an entire afternoon. Without an agreed-upon code of laws, some players were guided by rules they had learned in the British Isles, "others by no rules at all". Another milestone in 1858 was a 40-a-side match played under experimental rules between Melbourne Grammar and
Scotch College, held at the Richmond Paddock. Umpired by Wills and teacher
John Macadam, it began on 7 August and continued over two subsequent Saturdays, ending in a draw with each side kicking one goal. It is commemorated with a statue outside the MCG, and the two schools have since competed annually in the
Cordner–Eggleston Cup, the world's
oldest continuous football competition. Since the 1920s, it has been suggested that Australian football may have been derived from the Irish sport of
Gaelic football. However, there is no archival evidence in favour of a Gaelic influence, and the style of play shared between the two modern codes appeared in Australia long before the Irish game evolved in a similar direction. Another theory, first proposed in 1983, posits that Wills, having grown up among
Aboriginals in Victoria, may have seen or played the Aboriginal ball game of
Marn Grook, and incorporated some of its features into early Australian football. There is only circumstantial evidence that he knew of the game, and according to biographer Greg de Moore's research, Wills was "almost solely influenced by his experience at Rugby School".
First rules A loosely organised Melbourne side, captained by Wills, played against other football enthusiasts in the winter and spring of 1858. The following year, on 14 May, the
Melbourne Football Club was officially established, making it one of the world's
oldest football clubs. Three days later, Wills, Hammersley, Thompson and teacher
Thomas H. Smith met near the MCG at the Parade Hotel, owned by Bryant, and drafted ten rules:
"The Rules of the Melbourne Football Club". These are the laws from which Australian football evolved. The club aimed to create a simple code suited to the hard playing surfaces around Melbourne, and to eliminate the roughest aspects of English school games—such as "
hacking" (shin-kicking) in Rugby School football—to reduce the risk of injuries to working men. In another significant departure from English public school football, the Melbourne rules omitted any
offside law. "The new code was as much a reaction against the school games as influenced by them", writes Mark Pennings. The rules were distributed throughout the colony; Thompson in particular did much to promote the new code in his capacity as a journalist.
Early competition in Victoria , 1866. The MCG and its first pavilion are visible in the background, as are kick-off posts, the forerunner of today's behind posts. Following Melbourne's lead,
Geelong and
Melbourne University also formed football clubs in 1859. While many early Victorian teams participated in one-off matches, most had not yet formed clubs for regular competition. A
South Yarra club devised its own rules. To ensure the supremacy of the Melbourne rules, the first club-level competition in Australia, the Caledonian Society's
Challenge Cup (1861–64), stipulated that only the Melbourne rules were to be used. This law was reinforced by the Athletic Sports Committee (ASC), which ran a variation of the Challenge Cup in 1865–66. With input from other clubs, the rules underwent several minor revisions, establishing a uniform code known as "Victorian rules". In 1866, the "first distinctively Victorian rule", the
running bounce, was formalised at a meeting of club delegates chaired by
H. C. A. Harrison, an influential pioneer who took up football in 1859 at the invitation of Wills, his cousin. The game around this time was defensive and low-scoring, played low to the ground in congested rugby-style scrimmages. The typical match was a 20-per-side affair, played with a ball that was roughly spherical, and lasted until a team scored two goals. The shape of the playing field was not standardised; matches often took place in rough, tree-spotted public parks, most notably the Richmond Paddock (
Yarra Park), known colloquially as the Melbourne Football Ground. Wills argued that the turf of cricket fields would benefit from being trampled upon by footballers in winter, and, as early as 1859, football was allowed on the MCG. However, cricket authorities frequently prohibited football on their grounds until the 1870s, when they saw an opportunity to capitalise on the sport's growing popularity. Football gradually adapted to an oval-shaped field, and most grounds in Victoria expanded to accommodate the dual purpose—a situation that continues to this day.
Spread to other colonies , 1879 Football became organised in
South Australia in 1860 with the formation of the
Adelaide Football Club, the oldest football club in Australia outside Victoria. It devised its own rules, and, along with other
Adelaide-based clubs, played a variety of codes until 1876, when they uniformly adopted most of the Victorian rules, with South Australian football pioneer
Charles Kingston noting their similarity to "the old Adelaide rules". Similarly,
Tasmanian clubs quarrelled over different rules until they adopted a slightly modified version of the Victorian game in 1879. The
South Australian Football Association (SAFA), the sport's first
governing body, formed on 30 April 1877, firmly establishing Victorian rules as the preferred code in that colony. The
Victorian Football Association (VFA) formed the following month. , one of the first players to attain Australia-wide celebrity Clubs began touring the colonies in the late 1870s, and in 1879 the first
intercolonial match took place in Melbourne between
Victoria and
South Australia. In 1883, delegates representing the football associations of South Australia, Tasmania, Victoria and
Queensland met to standardise the code across Australia. New rules such as
holding the ball led to a "golden era" of fast, long-kicking and
high-marking football in the 1880s, a time which also saw players such as
George Coulthard achieve superstardom, as well as the rise of
professionalism, particularly in Victoria and
Western Australia, where the code took hold during
a series of gold rushes. Likewise, when
New Zealand experienced
a gold rush, the sport arrived with a rapid influx of Australian miners. Now known as Australian rules or Australasian rules, the sport became the first football code to develop mass spectator appeal, attracting world record attendances for sports viewing and gaining a reputation as "the people's game". Australian rules football reached Queensland and
New South Wales as early as 1866; the sport experienced a period of dominance in the former, and in the latter, several regions remain strongholds of Australian rules, such as the
Riverina. However, by the late 1880s,
rugby football had become the dominant code in both colonies, as well as in New Zealand. This shift was largely due to rugby's spread with British migration,
regional rivalries and the lack of strong local governing bodies. In the case of
Sydney, denial of access to grounds, the influence of university headmasters from Britain who favoured rugby, and the loss of players to other codes inhibited the game's growth.
Emergence of the VFL In 1896, delegates from six of the wealthiest VFA clubs—
Carlton,
Essendon,
Fitzroy, Geelong, Melbourne and
South Melbourne—met to discuss the formation of a breakaway professional competition. Later joined by
Collingwood and
St Kilda, the clubs formed the
Victorian Football League (VFL), which held
its inaugural season in 1897. The VFL's popularity grew rapidly as it made several innovations, such as instituting a finals system, reducing teams from 20 to 18 players, and introducing the
behind as a score.
Richmond and University joined the VFL in 1908, and by 1925, with the addition of
Hawthorn,
Footscray and
North Melbourne, it had become the preeminent league in the country and would take a leading role in many aspects of the sport.
Interstate football and the World Wars The time around the
federation of the Australian colonies in 1901 saw Australian rules undergo a revival in New South Wales, New Zealand and Queensland. In 1903, both the
Queensland Australian Football League and the
NSW Australian Football Association were established, and in New Zealand, as it moved towards becoming a
dominion, leagues were also established in the major cities. This renewed popularity helped encourage the formation of the
Australasian Football Council, which in 1908 in Melbourne staged the first national interstate competition, the
Jubilee Australasian Football Carnival, with teams representing each state and New Zealand. The game was also established early on in the new territories. In the new national capital
Canberra both soccer and rugby had a head start, but following the first matches in 1911,
Australian rules football in the Australian Capital Territory became a major participation sport. By 1981 it had become much neglected and quickly lagged behind the other football codes.
Australian rules football in the Northern Territory began shortly after the outbreak of the war in 1916 with the first match in
Darwin. The game went on to become the most popular sport in the Territory and build the highest participation rate for the sport nationally. , published in 1915, questions the public's commitment to Australian football rather than
the war. Both
World War I and
World War II had a devastating effect on Australian football and on Australian sport in general. While scratch matches were played by Australian "
diggers" in remote locations around the world, the game lost many of its great players to wartime service. Some clubs and competitions never fully recovered. Between 1914 and 1915,
a proposed hybrid code of Australian football and
rugby league, the predominant code of football in New South Wales and Queensland, was trialled without success. In Queensland, the state league went into recess for the duration of the war. VFL club University left the league and went into recess due to severe casualties. The
West Australian Football League (WAFL) lost two clubs and the SANFL was suspended for one year in 1916 due to heavy club losses. The
Anzac Day match, the annual game between Essendon and Collingwood on Anzac Day, is one example of how the war continues to be remembered in the football community. The role of the
Australian National Football Council (ANFC) was primarily to govern the game at a national level and to facilitate interstate representative and club competition. In 1968, the ANFC revived the
Championship of Australia, a competition first held in 1888 between the premiers of the VFA and SAFA. Although clubs from other states were at times invited, the final was almost always between the premiers from the two strongest state competitions of the time—South Australia and Victoria—with Adelaide hosting most of the matches at the request of the SAFA/SANFL. The last match took place in 1976, with
North Adelaide being the last non-Victorian winner in 1972. Between 1976 and 1987, the ANFC, and later the Australian Football Championships (AFC) ran a
night series, which invited clubs and representative sides from around the country to participate in a knock-out tournament parallel to the premiership seasons, which Victorian sides still dominated. With the lack of international competition, state representative matches were regarded with great importance. Due in part to the VFL poaching talent from other states, Victoria dominated interstate matches for three-quarters of a century.
State of Origin rules, introduced in 1977, stipulated that rather than representing the state of their adopted club, players would return to play for the state they were first recruited in. This instantly broke Victoria's stranglehold over state titles and Western Australia and South Australia began to win more of their games against Victoria. Both New South Wales and Tasmania scored surprise victories at home against Victoria in 1990.
Towards a national league was a leading advocate of a national club-based competition. The term "
Barassi Line", named after VFL star
Ron Barassi, was coined by scholar
Ian Turner in 1978 to describe the "fictitious geographical barrier" separating the rugby-following parts of New South Wales and Queensland from the rest of the country, where Australian football reigned. It became a reference point for the expansion of Australian football and for establishing a national league. The way the game was played had changed dramatically due to innovative coaching tactics, with the phasing out of many of the game's kicking styles and the increasing use of handball; while presentation was influenced by television. and
Sydney Swans line up for the
national anthem at the
2005 AFL Grand Final. In 1982, in a move that heralded big changes within the sport, one of the original VFL clubs, South Melbourne, relocated to Sydney and became known as the
Sydney Swans. In the late 1980s, due to the poor financial standing of many of the Victorian clubs, and a similar situation existing in Western Australia in the sport, the VFL pursued a more national competition. Two more non-Victorian clubs,
West Coast and
Brisbane, joined the league in 1987 generating more than $8 million in license revenue for the Victorian clubs and increasing broadcast revenues which helped the Victorian clubs survive. In their early years, the Sydney and Brisbane clubs struggled both on and off-field because the substantial TV revenues they generated by playing on a Sunday went to the VFL. To protect these revenues the VFL granted significant draft concessions and financial aid to keep the expansion clubs competitive. The VFL changed its name to the
Australian Football League (AFL) for the
1990 season, and over the next decade, three non-Victorian clubs gained entry:
Adelaide (1991),
Fremantle (1995) and the SANFL's
Port Adelaide (1997), the only pre-existing club outside Victoria to join the league. In 2011 and 2012, respectively, two new non-Victorian clubs were added to the competition:
Gold Coast and
Greater Western Sydney. The AFL, currently with 18 member clubs, is the sport's elite competition and most powerful body. Following the emergence of the AFL, state leagues were quickly relegated to a second-tier status. The VFA merged with the former VFL reserves competition in 1998, adopting the VFL name. State of Origin also declined in importance, especially after an increasing number of player withdrawals. The AFL turned its focus to the annual
International Rules Series against Ireland in 1998 before abolishing State of Origin the following year. State and territorial leagues still contest interstate matches, as do AFL Women players. In the 2010s, the AFL signalled further attempts at expanding into markets outside Australian football's traditional heartlands by hosting home-and-away matches in New Zealand, followed by China. After
several failed bids since the early 1990s for a Tasmania-based AFL team, the
Tasmania Football Club secured the 19th AFL license in 2023, and is set to compete by 2028. ==Laws of the game==